Linda, I think an overview written by you would be wonderful. I swear, sometimes the odd five words between commas in one of your pieces send me off on a 6-hour googling adventure! I don?t think you even notice anymore how much information you take as a given that?s juicy fodder for study for the rest of us. I have an appointment at the Cumberland County Historical Society on Saturday to view and copy the Shippensburg Project papers, if John Polk doesn?t beat me up there. (Karen Daniel at Shippensburg U. had never even heard of the Project and could come up with no traces of it.) Shall I forward a scan of the key and a panel to you so you know what we?re looking at? I?ll be copying the key, the 45 panels and who knows what else in the folder. I?ll wind up with a packet of 46-some pages (don?t know if there will be a copyright issue) and haven?t decided if e-mailing scans or printing and posting them to those who want copies would be easier. I may form a chain! If you want it, you gotta forward it to one other on the request list? And I can?t emphasize too much how priceless a close relationship with in-law researchers can be. If it weren?t for the 30 years of research and guidance that Dr. Henry Cathey has shared with me, this resource might have faded away before anyone else could benefit. (He got his panels via a paid Cumberland County researcher six years ago. If anyone knows Cynthia A. Miller, give her a kiss for us!) Sally Brandon